@JerryCoffin in order for one to carpe Diem one must first be equipped with the tools to do so, and the use of carpe Diemin in this scene has all the subtlety of a bulldozer . The video says more by what it never mentions. That these kids are the cream of the crop being instructed in the best of fitness, math, science, and literature by an elite institution. What else are they doing there other than preparing to conquer the world.
When Zen 1 launched, it already bad at the time. But there wasn't much I could do since there were no obvious optimizations that could be done and Intel's profiling tools don't work as well on AMD.
When Skylake X launched, the combination of lots of cores and AVX512 made the bandwidth bottleneck so large that it was obvious what I had to do.
Those revamps significantly pushed back the bottleneck on Skylake. It also had a side-effect of helping Zen 1. But it showed less in the numbers since Zen 1 wasn't that memory bound compared to Skylake X.
Skylake X went from "very memory-bound" to "borderline memory-bound". Zen 1 went from: "borderline memory-bound" to "not really memory bound".
Zen 2, I predict is now "very memory-bound". But would've have been "stupidly memory-bound" prior to the optimizations I did for Skylake X.
So it's another case of software/hardware cat-and-mouse.
Basic profiling is already doable with VTune on AMD. It's just the performance counters and system-wide stuff (like bandwidth usage) that requires platform-specific drivers.
Sort of an odd thing here and I'm not sure where else to address my issue, but I posted a question and within just a minute of it being posted it was flagged as a duplicate, when the question that it was linked to was something I have looked at and wasn't relevant to my actual issue. Can someone look into this for me?
@wilx consteval is kind of what most people really though constexpr would be. Marking a function as constexpr gives the compiler permission to evaluate that function at compile time. conteval doesn't just give permission--it requires compile-time evaluation.
I don't know of a constinit that's part of the language. Going from memory, it may be part of a proposal somebody wrote that's supposed to deal with static order of initialization issues (but I'm not certain of that, and don't remember anything further).
@wilx Yeah--but you can pretty much ignore consteval if you want to. constinit is currently only a proposal, so while it might be interesting to know the possibility is somewhere out there on the horizon, I wouldn't spend much time/effort on it. It might never happen, and even if it does, it's mostly just a way for people implementing iostreams (and similar) to use standardized black magic instead of platform-specific black-magic to make it work. Most have no reason to care.
@wilx I'm tempted to say something extremely conceited sounding like "of course I'm right"--then immediately follow it with something that's obviously wrong...